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Macromedia HomeSite. HomeSite was an HTML editor originally developed by Nick Bradbury. Unlike WYSIWYG HTML editors such as FrontPage and Dreamweaver, HomeSite was designed for direct editing, or "hand coding", of HTML and other website languages. After a successful partnership with the company to distribute it alongside its own competing ...
Website. www.macromedia.com (archived Dec 31, 2005) Macromedia, Inc., was an American graphics, multimedia, and web development software company (1992–2005) headquartered in San Francisco, California, that made products such as Flash and Dreamweaver. It was purchased by its rival Adobe Systems on December 3, 2005.
Ribbon (computing) In computer interface design, a ribbon is a graphical control element in the form of a set of toolbars placed on several tabs. The typical structure of a ribbon includes large, tabbed toolbars, filled with graphical buttons and other graphical control elements, grouped by functionality.
Macromedia HomeSite (replaced by Adobe Dreamweaver) Microsoft Expression Web; Microsoft FrontPage (replaced by Microsoft Expression Web and Microsoft SharePoint Designer)
Jeremy D. Allaire (born 13 May 1971) is an American technologist and Internet entrepreneur. He is CEO and founder of the digital currency company Circle and chairman of the board of Brightcove. With his brother JJ Allaire, he is a co-founder of the Allaire Corporation in 1995, which had an IPO in January 1999 [1] and was acquired by Macromedia ...
For development of ColdFusion applications, several tools are available: primarily Adobe Dreamweaver CS4, Macromedia HomeSite 5.x, CFEclipse, Eclipse and others. "Tag updaters" are available for these applications to update their support for the new ColdFusion 8 features.
Macromedia software. This category contains articles about software developed by Macromedia . Macromedia was acquired by Adobe Systems on December 3, 2005.
HomeSite is definitely still a useful and powerful tool, mainly because of all that ability to let users customize and extend it in so many ways. Heck, I've recently received new user-written HS extensions to provide support for XSLT, XML, Python and even Ruby and Ruby-on-Rail.